september quarterly report - alameda county, california · 2016-10-28 · september 2016 quarterly...
TRANSCRIPT
September 2016
Quarterly Report
ALL IN Alameda County is an innovation hub within county government that
leverages the insights and efforts of community residents, local businesses,
grassroots organizing efforts, traditional nonprofits, and foundations to
promote equity, opportunity, and the well-being of all county residents.
ALL IN is unique in its ability to inform state and local policy based on the direct experiences of county residents, as well as its capacity to innovate, pilot, evaluate, and scale solutions that work.
ALL IN’s vision and goals are rooted in the belief that all families in Alameda County must be able to:
Meet their basic needs for shelter, food, and safety,
Earn an income that allows for self-sufficiency and asset building,
Obtain a quality education that positions the next generation for
academic and economic success.
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Q U A R T E R LY R E P O R T S U M M A RY
ALL IN Alameda County has been hard at work this summer expanding Action Teams and preparing to launch pilot projects to achieve the goals set at the ALL IN for Thriving Communities Social Innovation Fair. ALL IN Alameda County’s projects this summer focused on planning and starting the 2016 Community Listening Sessions and redesigning the website. The details of ALL IN Alameda County’s summer projects are included in this report. As ALL IN Alameda County moves forward with implementing projects that address food insecurity and
affordable housing, to name a few, we are mindful of the importance of not only addressing the symptoms of
poverty, but also the root causes. While the pilot projects address need now, ALL IN Alameda County also
seeks opportunities to make upstream changes that will break the cycle of poverty, such as developing
greater access for youth to well-compensated career pathways, and insuring access to high-quality early
childhood education.
As we set priorities and design implementation projects, ALL IN Alameda County is working closely with
community residents, community-based organizations, and county and city agencies. Many of our pilot
projects were initiated by community residents, who continue to lead the efforts in carrying out their vision with
the support of ALL IN Alameda County and their partners.
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INVITATION FROM SUPERVISOR CHAN
Two and a half years ago, I launched ALL IN Alameda County to
respond to the unacceptable level of poverty in our county.
Thanks to the efforts of concerned individuals and organizations,
ALL IN brought together stakeholders at our Thriving Communities
Social Innovation Fair to develop action plans from community-
driven goals. ALL IN also established a governance structure
comprised of local leaders and engaged community residents.
I am proud of the work that ALL IN staff, members and partners
have done to advance innovative pilot projects. These community-
led efforts include a collaboration with UCSF Benioff Children’s
Hospital Oakland to provide healthy food to pre-diabetic, low-
income children; a high school entrepreneurship curriculum at
Island High School in Alameda; and two food recovery pilots -
one in Berkeley and another in South Hayward/Union City.
With economic disparities in the Bay Area more severe than ever, this work is integral to our
community’s survival. The testimonials of nearly 1,000 Alameda County residents at last fall’s
county-wide listening sessions highlighted the stressors and barriers that too many of our residents
face when trying to afford housing, food, childcare, and education. The time to act is NOW.
ALL IN has been dedicated to community engagement and continues to prioritize community
voices. Many of our current action teams were developed by community residents concerned with
an issue in their neighborhood. These individuals are not professional policy-makers or non-profit
employees but rather community leaders working every day to overcome the hurdles brought on
by poverty. Our Berkeley food recovery pilot was initiated by a senior citizen on SSI who lives in
an affordable housing complex and is concerned with hunger among seniors. Our Island High
School project came directly from the students who participated both in the community listening
sessions and the Social Innovation Fair. The South Hayward/Union City food recovery pilot came
from individuals already involved in food gleaning and other anti-hunger projects in southern
Alameda County. These are the voices, ideas, and passion that ALL IN strives to support. I am
confident that these projects will pave the way for the development of county-wide initiatives, as
we leverage our position within local government to advocate for important systemic changes.
I invite you to join us. ALL IN holds a general bi-monthly meeting and action teams meet more
frequently as their implementation schedules dictate. Everyone is welcome to become part of this
essential work. Together, we can end poverty in one of the wealthiest regions of the world.
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INTRODUCING ALL IN ALAMEDA COUNTY’S WEBSITE REDESIGN
Overview
To better reflect ALL IN’s 2016 action plans and provide updated information on the work ALL IN Alameda
County is doing, staff worked with the Alameda County Information and Technology Department to redesign
the website. Among the new features are a calendar of events, general membership and Steering Committee
meeting minutes, and contact information for ALL IN staff and Action Team leaders. The website address is the
same: allin.acgov.org.
Home Page
The Home page now includes a direct link to the calendar, the most recent Quarterly Report, social media
feeds, and the video KDOL produced for 2015’s Community Listening Sessions.
About Us
The About Us page now includes an overview of ALL IN Alameda County’s governance structure, including a
list of current Steering Committee members, and guiding principles. Contact information for ALL IN Alameda
County staff is available on this page.
Our Action Plan
The Our Action Plan page
is the one-stop shop for
information on each Action
Team’s goals, issues,
updates, and team
leader’s contact
information. Important ALL
IN documents, such as
meeting minutes and past
Quarterly Reports, are
also available on this
page.
Donate
The Donate page includes a list of ALL IN Alameda County’s generous supporters and a link to our fiscal
sponsor, Philanthropic Ventures Foundation, for anyone who would like to make an online contribution to ALL
IN Alameda County.
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Get Involved
The Get Involved page features the calendar of events and will have a complete listing of ALL IN’s events as
well as events sponsored by our partners. If you have an event to share with ALL IN members, please e-mail
Sarah Oddie ([email protected]) with the event details.
PREPARING FOR 2016 COMMUNITY LISTENING SESSIONS
Over the summer, ALL IN staff raised funds to establish mini-grants for Community Listening Sessions as an
annual community engagement program. The Request for Proposals (RFP) went out in early September and
will close in early October. ALL IN Alameda County will announce awardees in late October and listening
sessions will be held until mid-December. These listening sessions will inform our 2017 action plans.
In addition to community-led listening sessions, ALL IN staff is working with community leaders to provide voter
education town halls and voter registration events in the month of October. The voter education town halls will
focus on a handful of state and local initiatives that address issues relating to economic inequality. These
neutral town halls will provide residents information on how these measures can affect their communities, both
in terms of what happens if the initiative passes and if it does not.
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REPORT ON ACTION TEAMS
Overview
Over the summer, ALL IN’s Action Teams continued developing the pilot projects initiated in the spring. Pilot
projects for Food as Medicine, Food Recovery, and CalFresh are set to launch this fall. Third quarter efforts
focused on refining pilot project development, preparing pilot projects for launch, and organizing 2016’s
Community Listening Sessions mini-grant process.
Our Initiatives:
Food Recovery: Develop a comprehensive county-wide food recovery system
Food as Medicine: Provide food “farmacies” in healthcare centers
CalFresh: Enroll 100% of eligible Alameda County residents in CalFresh
Youth Career Pathways: Develop career pathways for system-involved youth
Affordable Housing: Increase the number of residents securing affordable housing
Entrepreneurship: Build a comprehensive guide for local entrepreneurs
Food as Medicine
It has been said that “obesity is the new face of hunger in America,”
referring to the fact that while there are many calories available for
people to eat, far too many of those calories are empty of nutritional
value, and may promote obesity and diet-related diseases, such as
diabetes and heart disease. The Food as Medicine team is partnering with
Dr. June Tester and UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital Oakland to develop
a study examining the effects of providing pre-diabetic Medi-Cal
pediatric patients “food prescriptions,” which will be filled by Dig Deep
Farms and the Alameda County Community Food Bank (ACCFB). This pilot
program will also include home visits, and cooking and nutrition education
classes to ensure families know how to prepare the produce they receive.
The Alameda County Department of Public Health will provide culturally
relevant cookbooks in appropriate languages, and classes and cooking
demonstrations for patients and their families in neighborhood settings.
The study is starting with 100 subjects, who will be identified by pediatricians at Children’s Hospital living in
one of five high-poverty zip codes (2 in Hayward and 3 in Oakland). Both health outcomes and behavioral
changes will be assessed, to determine what is possible when families are provided with both the ingredients
and know-how to prepare fresh and healthy food.
Families will begin receiving food in the early fall, and the study will run for approximately a year. Even
before the pilot study is concluded, ALL IN is seeking other opportunities to partner with federally-qualified
health centers (FQHCs) to develop on-site food “farmacies,” where patients can access produce, whole grains,
and healthy shelf-stable proteins. As we learn from this initial implementation, ALL IN is eager to promote
healthy eating county-wide.
Efforts in the third quarter were focused around fundraising and final project design; these efforts were
successful and the project is fully funded for the pilot phase.
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Food Recovery
The Food Recovery team is currently working on two pilots – one in Berkeley and one in South
Hayward/Union City – brought forward by community food justice advocates. In addition to the regional
pilots, the Food Recovery team is also working to design a county-wide approach to food recovery that
involves the development of a paid workforce of food recovery professionals.
The two neighborhood level pilot projects will launch volunteer-based food running operations that will prioritize sourcing nutritious food items, especially fresh produce, and serving Alameda County residents who are most vulnerable to food insecurity. Both pilots will conduct pre and post food insecurity surveys to measure the impact their food recovery program may have on food insecurity. The county-wide pilot will focus on developing a food recovery service sector that includes paid food runners.
Because these food recovery pilots developed from ALL IN’s work, we are including a research component to examine if food recovery can help to reduce food insecurity. It is important to uplift that ALL IN’s food security work is based on the principle that food insecurity is a symptom of poverty; and that providing food alone will not rid Alameda County of food insecurity. Rather, eliminating food insecurity requires a holistic solution and multi-pronged approach. We believe that food recovery can be an important part of that approach.
Washington Eden Food Recovery Cooperative
(WE Run Food)
FORMERLY: SOUTH HAYWARD/UNION CITY
PILOT
WE Run Food received a generous grant that provides resources to operate a year-long food recovery pilot program. After further research, WE Run Food came to the decision that the pilot will examine the use of the customer support software, Fresh Deck. Fresh Deck will be used for food matching, managing volunteer food runners, and evaluating specific components of the food runs. The first food recovery cohort of 5 donors, 5 recipient organizations, and 5 volunteer food runners has been established. WE Run Food volunteers will distribute and collect the food insecurity surveys to
residents in the South Hayward and Union City communities. In preparation for their launch of November 1st, WE Run Food has set up a website, Facebook, and Twitter.
Berkeley Pilot
Over the summer the Satellite Affordable Housing Associates’ (SAHA) pilot in Berkeley worked on evaluation
and preparing for program design. The evaluation work focused on developing a survey to measure how
SAHA residents may be experiencing food insecurity. The surveys were distributed through the September
Town Hall meetings and with the help of the Service Coordinators for the three sites. All the surveys will be
collected on October 3rd. These surveys will be compared to post-pilot surveys to understand if the food
recovery programs had any impact on food insecurity among residents. The surveys will also help inform the
design of the programs. The SAHA pilot food recovery programs are now in the design phase. The goal is to
launch by November 1st.
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Preparing for County-Wide: Food Recovery Feasibility
On August 5th, there was a county-wide stakeholder meeting to discuss how to collaboratively engage in developing a food recovery service sector. At the meeting it was agreed that ALL IN would submit a proposal to the Closed Loop Fund’s Food Waste Solution Search RFP for resources to design and implement a food recovery service sector feasibility study. ALL IN and Food Shift submitted “sister proposals” that are separate but complimentary to each other. This approach demonstrates the strong relationships and commitment to working together toward a shared goal of a food recovery service sector in Alameda County. This proposal was also modified and used to submit an “idea” to the OpenIDEO challenge, how might we dramatically reduce waste by transforming our relationship with food? The challenge has several different phases, and the “ideas” that advance to the final Top Ideas phase have the chance of being awarded $25,000 to support implementation of their “idea.” ALL IN’s idea has advanced to the Refinement Phase, along with 41 other ideas. The Top Ideas will be announced October 21st. A second meeting is being planned for mid-October to begin designing the feasibility study.
Affordable Housing
ALL IN’s efforts for the Affordable Housing
Action Team were focused around designing
voter education with regard to the housing bond
the Board of Supervisors placed on the
November ballot. The Affordable Housing team
made presentations to various City Councils in
Alameda County to inform local elected officials
on the housing crisis in our county.
In addition, ALL IN staff participated on a
planning team for the Interagency Children’s
Policy Council (ICPC)’s fall forum, which is
focused on housing stability for transition-aged
youth.
CalFresh
In October, the Alameda County Social Services Agency (SSA) will begin mailing 20,000 pre-filled CalFresh
applications to Medi-Cal recipients who are not currently enrolled in CalFresh. SSA estimates roughly
220,000 Medi-Cal recipients are not enrolled in CalFresh and approximately 80% are eligible for CalFresh.
The pilot will start with 10,000 families with children and 10,000 seniors.
Alameda County has the lowest CalFresh enrollment in the state and SSA is working with ALL IN Alameda
County, the Alameda County Community Food Bank (ACCFB), and other community partners to develop
innovative ways to outreach to the community and increase enrollment numbers.
Entrepreneurship
After the Social Innovation Fair, students from Island High School who attended the Entrepreneurship challenge
track reached out to the facilitator, Arturo Noriega of Centro Community Partners, to develop an
entrepreneurship curriculum at the high school. During their listening session, many students expressed a desire
to learn life skills in addition to the standard academic curriculum. ALL IN Alameda County is currently
coordinating efforts with leadership at Island High School and Centro Community Partners to integrate
Centro’s smartphone app and curriculum for teaching entrepreneurship into the Island High School Economics’
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teacher’s current curriculum to launch in the fall
of 2016. The third quarter efforts focused on
formalizing the partnership between Island
High School and Centro Community Partners.
In thinking about addressing the causes
preventing local entrepreneurs from starting or
growing their businesses, ALL IN is working on
developing a one-stop resource for
entrepreneurs to guide them through the
system. Staff is interested in collaborating with
our partners in the unincorporated communities
in Alameda County.
Youth Career Pathways
ALL IN Alameda County staff has been conducting fact-finding interviews with youth serving and workforce
development organizations including:
Hayward Adult School
Cypress Mandela
Clean 360
Center for Employment Opportunities
My Brother’s Keeper
The Unity Council’s Latino Men and Boys Program
The Unity Council’s Peralta Services Corporation
Let’s Work Initiative
In June, the Alameda County Board of Supervisors unanimously passed a resolution to provide 1,400 jobs for
formerly incarcerated residents and opportunity youth. The resolution, now the Let’s Work Initiative, aims to
establish system-involved youth, CalWORKs clients, and youth in the school-to-prison pipeline in sustainable
career pathway jobs. ALL IN Alameda County will partner with Supervisor Carson’s office and the Justice
Reinvestment Coalition in addressing workforce development and job placement for this population.
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Spotlight On: Clean 360
In August, the ALL IN Team visited Clean360 – a social
enterprise that creates small batch, handcrafted soaps in
its workshop and retail location in Oakland’s Uptown
neighborhood. Clean360 serves as the training ground for
the Roots Community Health Center’s Emancipator
Initiative. The Emancipators Initiative seeks to empower
individuals who have been disconnected from the
workforce for an extended period of time, have
experienced significant barriers to employment, and may not have basic job readiness skills by providing
them with on-the-job training and whole-person support, including wraparound health, legal, and basic
education services.
Clean360 employees are paid a living wage, receive light manufacturing training, and learn soft-skills. Roots’
Health Navigators also provide employees with intensive wraparound services, including life management
skills-building, public benefits enrollment, support for the removal of legal, economic, and transportation
barriers, and mentoring and coaching. The goal is stabilize participants’ lives, so that they are prepared and
able to enter the workforce. Once participants have completed the training program and have addressed
their employment barriers, they are linked to permanent employment while receiving ongoing support from
Roots.
Over the last two years, 27 participants have graduated from the Emancipators Initiative with 96%
demonstrating long-term self-sufficiency and stable employment, and 97 percent of formerly incarcerated
graduates have not been incarcerated since completing the program. Building on this success, Roots hopes to
expand the capacity of the Emancipators Initiative and Clean360 enterprise in order to serve an increasing
number of the reentry and hard-to-employ population.
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Membership & Steering Committee
Steering Committee
Hon. Wilma Chan, Chair
Silvia Guzman, Vice-Chair (must be a
community resident)
Allison Pratt, Alameda County Community
Food Bank
Renee Herzfeld, 4C’s of Alameda County
Shaniece Alexander, Oakland Food
Policy Council
John Yuasa
Lori Cox, Alameda County Social
Services Agency
Dr. Muntu Davis, Alameda County Public
Health Department
Hilary Bass, Alameda County Sheriff ’s
Department
Linda Gardner, Alameda County
Community Development Agency
Katie Booser, Inner City Advisors
Estelle Clemons, AC-OCAP
Julie Hadnot, Interagency Children’s
Policy Council
Kristin Spanos, First Five Alameda County
Kristi Miller, Tri-Valley Poverty Awareness
Initiative
Jalpa Patel, Rise Together
Membership
Supervisor Wilma Chan, District 3
Supervisor Nate Miley, District 4
Alameda County Community Development Agency
Alameda County Early Childhood Council
Alameda County Health Care Services Agency
Alameda County Public Health Department
Alameda County Social Services Agency
Alameda County Sheriff’s Department
Congresswoman Barbara Lee
City of Livermore
Oakland Unified School District Nutrition Services
Alameda County Community Food Bank
Alameda County Meals on Wheels
Alameda County-Oakland Community Action Partnership
California Association of Food Banks
City Slicker Farms
Community Food and Justice Coalition
CoFED – the Cooperative Food Empowerment Directive
First 5 Alameda County
FoodShift!
Fresh Approach
Gobee Group
Hope Collaborative
Independent Association of Global Girl Media
Interagency Children’s Policy Council
Mandela Marketplace
Namu Farm
Oakland Food Policy Council
Parent Voices Oakland
PUEBLO: People United for a Better Life in Oakland
Rise Together
SEIU-UHW
Tri-Valley Poverty Awareness Initiative
Youth Radio
Full Court Press Communications
Inner City Advisors
Street Degree
East Bay Community Foundation
Thomas J. Long Foundation
Y & H Soda Foundation
STAY INVOLVED!
Attend ALL IN membership meetings: o Thursday, November 17, 11 am-1pm, REACH/Ashland Youth Center
Action teams are continuing to work on the seven challenge track topics. Your participation and leadership are appreciated! For more information or to join an action team, contact Sarah Oddie at [email protected].
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